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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,194 questions • 30,738 answers • 901,722 learners
In english, if someone is upset, or if something's going on, i might ask "what is it?". I'm not exaclty asking the meaning of something but im wondering about a situation if that makes sense.
So would the french translation in that scenario be "c'est quoi/qu'est-ce que c'est"? Or does that only refer to a noun.
I hope I'm making sense.
I want a lesson in using the above topics. How do I find the lesson for a specific problem AND... can I make a lesson if there isn't one already?
Thanx timothy
In the test question: "Suzanne aime les vêtements [INSERT]", the correct answer is "orange". My question is: wouldn't the color orange agree with the noun ("les vêtements") which is plural? Why is the correct answer "orange" and not, as one might assume, "oranges"?
I just have one suggestion to make the seek bar (at the top) movable at the vocal section so that we can listen to how to pronounce and complete the sentence in the native way. Right now it is in one go.. if i have to listen , how to say the second last line I have to listen from the very beginning till the second last sentence.
Hope someone fix this.
I am learning french from you guys... Its Fabulous. Thanks for the material
What does the tip mean, "Masculin always wins in french?" I don't understand this. Kindly elaborate. Thanks!
Unsure of the correct translation of D Day I turned to wordreference. They start with Le Jour J. Why is that incorrect?
The full text says office DU tourisme, and my de was corrected to du. I thought it was de and the admittedly unreliably Google translate says de ... but even the vocab list at the beginning of the lesson says de. Merci.
Hi teachers/fellow learners, for the last sentence "où Le Débarquement a eu lieu en 1944" I was under the impression that for known facts we use present tense in French, but it turns out that passé composé is more suitable. Can you tell me more about this? Thank you so much.
"En 1941, il est parti rejoindre le Général de Gaulle à Londres"
Is this correct? I wrote "En 1941, il est parti joindre le Général de Gaulle à Londres". Did Michel's oncle rejoin de Gaulle?
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